South Korean fans shower Canadian skater with threats, abuse after Olympic controversy

Arianna Fontana of Italy and Choi Min-jeong of South Korea race for the finish line during the short track speed skating women’s 500-meter final at the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics. (Getty Images)

The results of the women’s short track speed skating 500-meter final at the 2018 Winter Olympics were a story by themselves. Italy’s Arianna Fontana, who entered her fourth Olympic Games with five medals but no golds, finally stood atop the podium.

But the photo finish that handed her victory wasn’t even the most dramatic aspect of Tuesday’s race.

South Korea’s Choi Min-jeong, the 19-year-old home-crowd favorite, barely lost out to Fontana. But the teenager’s skate was at worst admirable, and at best heroic despite defeat. A silver medal on home soil was something to be proud of.

But race officials didn’t just take their time reviewing the photo finish. They deliberated for a while before deciding to disqualify Choi for interference. The Korean crowd, which had been chanting Choi’s name, fell into stunned silence.

And then disbelief turned to anger. Why had Choi been penalized, especially if she was the one who had seemingly been pushed by Canada’s Kim Boutin earlier in the race?

She was first pushed by Canada she almost bump on the wall. Minjeong finished 2nd but was later on announced that she was disqualified and was replaced by Canada on the 2nd place. How come?#최민정선수_실격반대pic.twitter.com/MQgYSgTV9b

#최민정선수_실격반대 Italia also tried to block her while approaching the finish line. Minjeong was hit on the face but Italia didnt get a penalty either just like Canada. Italia won by less than a second. Minjeong got a penalty for touching Italia. pic.twitter.com/QQLjgvpGBk

But Boutin, who ended up on the medal stand despite finishing fourth, became a convenient and unfortunate subject of fans’ anger. She became the villain.

Korean fans flooded to Boutin’s latest Instagram post, from a day earlier. The post quickly accumulated over 13,000 comments in a matter of hours, many of them in Korean.

Boutin has since protected her account by making it private, but here’s a sampling of the abuse she took. One of the comments simply featured knife emojis:

View photos

(Screenshot: Kim Boutin’s Instagram page)

View photos

(Screenshot: Kim Boutin’s Instagram page)

It’s not the first time South Korean skating fans have abused a Korean skater’s opponent. Four years ago in Sochi, they believed Great Britain’s Elise Christie was guilty of causing Park Seung-Hi to crash. They went at Christie with endless threats.

“The way the Koreans responded had made me scared of living,” Christie said recently. “I couldn’t sleep. I was worried. I know it seems so dramatic. But I thought people actually did want to kill me.”